Could USA Be Next?

11 02 2010

Here’s why governments should NOT get in bed with Unions. Yet, we now have a president that absolutely loves Unions. In fact, a guy by the name of Andy Stern of SEIU, is the head of the largest Union in the country, and has the honor of having more visits with Obama in the Oval Office, than anyone else in the country.

The headline below should read… “Greece crippled by Unions”

Gio-

Greece crippled by public strikes.

Thousands of Greek civil servants staged a 24-hour strike shutting schools and grounding flights yesterday, but a protest march was poorly attended, offering some hope Athens can tackle a debt crisis shaking the euro zone.

Some 5,000 members of the ADEDY public sector union gathered before Parliament chanting “Traitors” and waving banners reading “We won’t pay for the crisis”. Riot police briefly fired teargas at demonstrators who tried to cross a nearby security cordon.

The 500,000-strong union wants Prime Minister George Papandreou to scrap emergency measures including a wage and pension freeze, and has threatened to escalate its protests.

“These measures are unjust and we will continue our struggle as long as the government does not change its policies,” ADEDY General Secretary Ilias Iliopoulos said, adding that his union would likely join a private sector walkout on February 24.

Mr Iliopoulos said 70 per cent of members joined the stoppage, but many public employees appeared at ministries and schools.

Yesterday’s strike left thousands of tourists stranded as it shut airports to all but emergency flights and closed the port of Piraeus which serves much of the Aegean. Historic attractions like Athens’ Acropolis were also closed to visitors.

It is seen as just the first in a series of planned protests whose severity will depend on Mr Papandreou’s success in restoring faith in the economy, which he says will grow this year.

“The Prime Minister didn’t keep his promises and he is dipping his hands in the pockets of the poor,” said Eleni Papapostolou, 46, a teacher and mother of two. “I have to cut out coffee just to get by. Ordinary people have debts too.”

The public sector strike comes a day after the government unveiled details of measures to cut its deficit below the EU ceiling of three per cent of GDP by 2012, from 12.7 per cent last year — the highest in the 16 nation euro zone.

Unions oppose the proposals to freeze public wages, slash the salary supplements many Greeks get on top of basic pay, and replace only one in five people leaving the civil service.





Give George W. Bush A Boost

11 02 2010

Considering how Comrade Obama is ruining the country (not running) I’m guessing there are a lot of people that actually miss George Bush. The following link is a poll asking if people miss him. So far, some 41% have chosen “Missing” him. Let’s help him out a bit…

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/poll/2010/feb/11/george-bush-billboard-poll





Where’s The Left Now?

11 02 2010

I copied this from Daves Notepad @ http://davesnotepad.blogspot.com/. Below is just a small part of the piece he has so you can go to his blog to read all. The problem is… You may have problems making comments on his site. It’s not Daves fault. Evidently, blogspot.com has some bugs in their system.

Dave swears this is himself.

Anyway… the case below should scare the pants off of the girlie-screamers on the left. When Bush was doing something similar, the left wanted him to hang until dead on the front lawn of the White House. So what happened to all those screamers now that Obama is doing it???

Let’s flush them out, and have fun at the same time. Here’s how to shake them up… simply copy the two paragraphs below, then go to any of your favorite sites where Progressives hang out and post these two paragraphs, with link included of course. Post this about once a week at these sites and watch the hate-mongers jump all over you.

Gio-

The Obamanistas Want To Track Your Cell Phone

Even though police are tapping into the locations of mobile phones thousands of times a year, the legal ground rules remain unclear, and federal privacy laws written a generation ago are ambiguous at best. On Friday, the first federal appeals court to consider the topic will hear oral arguments (PDF) in a case that could establish new standards for locating wireless devices.

In that case, the Obama administration has argued that warrantless tracking is permitted because Americans enjoy no “reasonable expectation of privacy” in their–or at least their cell phones’–whereabouts. U.S. Department of Justice lawyers say that “a customer’s Fourth Amendment rights are not violated when the phone company reveals to the government its own records” that show where a mobile device placed and received calls. You will find the entire article here http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10451518-38.html.





Thursdays Open Thread

11 02 2010

Surprise… It snowed here again. In fact, it’s 1:30 am and it’s still snowing. Thankfully it’s getting blown around so it’s only adding to the height of snow banks.

HELP WANTED: Please keep an eye on anything that happens in your state concerning public education. We are working on an important project and any input would be helpful. If something sounds or reads a little fishy to you, please send us the link. Usually, people’s first instinct is dead-on accurate. Thank you.

Ok gang, the floor is all yours…

Keep on the look-out for our government trying to steal our country right out from under us!





The Left Is Getting Desperate

11 02 2010

If things continue to go downhill for the Obama agenda, we will have a front seat to an unusual event… the meltdown of the Progressive/Marxist left. My suggestion is… stock-up on Popcorn!

Below is another email alert sent out by PFAW, People for the American Way, an extraordinarily marxist organization. They use the cover of having a patriotic sounding name to suck people in, but trust me, they are as anti-American as they come. And, they seem to be getting desperate. Read what they are sending out to all their members. According to them… It’s the end of the world!!!

Gio-

PFWA…

The criticism of Sarah Palin by the media and the progressive blogosphere this week has been intense, but their focus has missed what is important: it’s not the writing on her hand, it’s the writing on the wall.

On Saturday, Palin delivered the keynote speech at the first “National Tea Party Convention” in Nashville. It was a broad, right-wing political barn burner, incorporating Religious Right rhetorical swipes and jabs at Obama’s foreign policy — things the Tea Party movement itself has never been about. But it did also included plenty of obligatory red meat attacks on the Democrats’ agenda and Obama administration initiatives famously unpopular with that crowd — the stimulus, health care reform.

To the amusement of pundits, Palin was seen on camera checking crib notes she had written on her hand as she delivered the speech. She taunted the millions of Americans who, driven by a sincere desire for change, were inspired by Barack Obama’s candidacy for president: “How is that hopey-changey stuff working out for you?”

Beyond the theatrics, her speech was full of empty rhetoric aimed at capitalizing on the anti-establishment rage that defines the Tea Party movement. It was riddled with inaccuracies and bent the truth. But more important than what it lacked, is what it revealed and acknowledged:

1. That the Right is running on empty. They have no ideas or solutions for dealing with the significant problems that we face. Their movement at this time is all about exploiting and inciting the rage of disaffected and frustrated Americans.

2. As the Tea Party movement becomes increasingly co-opted by the Republican establishment, the tea party narrative has managed to become the narrative of the Right Wing.

Whatever “populism” the Tea Party movement once possibly had, Palin’s speech might have signaled its end. The anti-establishment anger that the movement purports to speak to is very real, and how we as Americans deal with this anger will have tremendous influence on the future of our country.

Some in the Democratic Party think that trying to appease the Tea Party element is smart short-term politics. But this will lead nowhere. We need your help to fight against this dangerous thinking. With your support, People For the American Way will help make sure that Tea Party politics don’t limit Americans’ options on Election Day to a choice between somewhat right-wing and ultra right-wing.

You can help to expose the Right during this critical election year with a contribution to help fund our work.

As always, your continued support is deeply appreciated.

Sincerely,


Michael B. Keegan, President





Obama Blames GOP For Everything

11 02 2010

Obama may want to blame the GOP for holding-up nominations, but they are holding them-up for some very valid reasons. Remember how during the campaign Obama promised there would be no Lobbyists working in his circle opf influence. Well, this is just like that promise. Not only does he have close to 40 Lobbyists working in high level positions within his cabinet, he keeps denying that the people he chooses for his administration don’t have an agenda. Every damned person that works for him has an agenda, it’s just covered up well because some of his people are too stupid to realize what they are doing. He’s hiring people that have that glorious dream of us all living as blind controllable units to maintain the larger engine known as Marxism. I don’t care why the GOP is holding up these appointments, they just need to keep doing it!

Gio-

Obama Blames Staffing Problems on GOP

FOXNews.com

Over 200 White House nominations are still pending in the Senate, and Obama blames Republican’s ‘obstinacy,’ which he says is ‘rooted not in substantive disagreements but in political expedience.’

President Obama, struggling to staff his administration after a year in office, is blaming Republican efforts to “delay and obstruct” his nominees in the Senate — and threatening to counteract those tactics with recess appointments.

Over 200 nominations are estimated to still be pending in the Senate, and Obama blames the minority party’s “obstinacy,” which he says is “rooted not in substantive disagreements but in political expedience.”

“I respect the Senate’s role to advise and consent, but for months, qualified, non-controversial nominees for critical positions in government — often positions related to our national security — have been held up despite having overwhelming support,” Obama said in a news conference Tuesday.

Obama cited his pick to head the General Services Administration, Martha N. Johnson, who was confirmed by a 96-0 vote in the Senate last week — nine months after Obama nominated her for the position.

“That’s not advise and consent. That’s delay and obstruct,” he said, warning that if the Senate “does not act to confirm these nominees, I will consider making several recess appointments during the upcoming recess.”

Republicans note Democrats sharply criticized the practice when President Bush used it. 

“Sen. Ted Kennedy at the time said it was a devious maneuver to evade the constitutional requirements,” said Republican Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming. 

But now Democrats have a different view. 

“I have told the president enough is enough,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. “He has the right as president of the United States to do recess appointments.” 

Other presidents have used the practice when faced with resistance from the opposition party. 

During his two terms, Ronald Reagan made 240 of them. George H.W. Bush made 77 during his one term. Bill Clinton made 139 in two terms and George W. Bush made 171. 

The Obama administration has announced nominees for 569 posts requiring Senate confirmation, according to the White House Transition Group, an independent organization that tracks such positions. The Senate has received 561 of those nominations, but so far only 353 have been confirmed — just 62 percent of Obama’s announced picks, the group reported.
Fox News was unable Wednesday to verify the group’s tally with White House officials. 

Click here to see the group’s report. 

The unconfirmed administration posts, which do not include ambassadors, U.S. attorneys or positions still awaiting nominations from Obama, mark a greater percentage than in the Bush White House, according to the White House Transition Group’s research. 

After former President George W. Bush’s first year in office, the Senate had confirmed 360 of 513 administration posts named — 70 percent of his announced nominees that year, according to the group. 

The unconfirmed positions in Obama’s administration include posts within a host of cabinet departments, like the departments of Homeland Security, Defense, Education, Energy, Justice, Labor and Treasury. 

Senate Republicans have fiercely objected to a number of Obama’s nominees, most recently union lawyer Craig Becker, whose confirmation to the National Labor Relations Board remains in limbo after it failed to advance in a Senate vote Tuesday. 

GOP lawmakers, including Arizona Sen. John McCain, have vowed to place a hold on his nomination, claiming that Becker would make pro-union changes on the NLRB without congressional approval. 

Becker, who currently serves as associate general counsel to the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), a labor union representing about 1.8 million workers, was approved in October by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

But McCain and a slew of business groups have raised questions over articles and academic journals written by Becker on the very labor law he would work to interpret if confirmed to the board. 

Critics say Becker’s writings reflect views that support restricting employers’ free speech rights and limiting the ability of employers to converse with their employees during union representation campaigns.

The practice of recess appointments is common among presidents.





Great News For Oregon

10 02 2010

Last weekend was a great weekend for Sports. For me it was MMA on Saturday Night then the Super Bowl the following day. Sort of the perfect weekend if you ask me.

Chael Sonnen.

For those of you unfamiliar with MMA, let briefly explain. MMA stands for “Mixed Martial Arts”. Two guys trained in any number of combat sports, step into an Octagon and go mano e mano for either 3 five minute rounds, or if there is a title up on the block, they can go 5 five minute rounds. Some call it brutal and barbaric, when in fact, you stand a better chance of having long term damage done to your body if you are a professional Boxer. It’s a real sport, and I follow it religiously.

Anyway, one of the fights on the card for Saturday was middleweight Chael Sonnen against Nate (The Great) Marquardt. My guy, Chael Sonnen won! This is also good news for Oregon because now that he has that fight out of the way he can start campaigning for the state house of representatives as a Republican in District 37. No, this is NOT  joke. In fact, you will find out in short order that Mr. Sonnen (I suggest everyone call him ‘sir’ or ‘Mr.’ from now on) is not only tough in the ring, he would be a tough Conservative leader. Have fun with this one folks!

Gio-

Middleweight Chael Sonnen wins at UFC 109, now looks to win Oregon state seat as politician

By: Neil Davidson, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Chael Sonnen will fight for Conservative principles too.

LAS VEGAS - Chael Sonnen doesn’t plan any door-to-door campaigning for a month or so in his run for a seat in the Oregon house of representatives.

And that’s good, because the 32-year-old mixed martial arts fighter from West Linn, Ore., might scare the voters after his upset win over middleweight Nate (The Great) Marquardt at UFC 109 on Saturday night.

Sonnen dominated en route to a unanimous 30-27 decision in the co-main event before 10,687 at a sold out Mandalay Bay Events Center, earning a middleweight title shot in the process. But Sonnen paid a price for the win.

After the fight, Sonnen looked like he had been in a car crash. An ugly slash of stitches curved down his forehead, courtesy of a Marquardt elbow. There were more stitches on the bridge of his nose and blood in his mouth from a cut on the inside of his lip.

“I have never felt so bad in my life,” the winner said. “I’ve been rear-ended in traffic, I’ve had bumps and bruises from sports, from gymnastics to wrestling. I’ve never felt this bad ever.

“Both feet hurt, both knees hurt, both elbows hurt, both hands hurt. Let’s see, my sternum’s killing me, my head’s bleeding, my nose got stitched. The inside of my mouth is cut. I feel horrible.”

Sonnen didn’t know how many stitches he got, “but I was in there a while.”

“I haven’t even got to a mirror yet to see how bad I look,” he added.

Here’s hoping he waits a while.

Sonnen (26-10-1) is no ordinary fighter. He combines fighting with a full-time job as a realtor and now wants to add elected official to his resume (www.votesonnen.com).

He was recruited by the Republicans to run for the state house of representatives as a Republican in District 37. The primary election is in May with the general election in November.

The seat is currently held by Republican Scott Brunn, who is moving on in a bid to get elected to the U.S. house of representatives.

Sonnen’s current priority is fundraising. He reckons his campaign budget will be some US$400,000 with UFC president Dana White and co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta already making donations.

“I’m not going to be going door-to-door for about another month,” he said. “But when that starts, I’m going to be going door-to-door every day. When my feet get tired, I’m going to go home and be on the telephone asking for support.”

Ironically, Sonnen says any rise in his profile as a fighter probably hinders his political chances.

“Being a meathead isn’t something that people want in their government officials is my guess. … I can reverse that but I’ve got to get out there, I’ve got to meet the people, let them meet me, explain why I’m running. Explain what brought me to this decision and leave fighting as far behind me as I can and try to shift that in their head and let them see these are two separate things. I’m not a meathead but I do compete (as a fighter) three times a year.”

Sonnen has already served as an elected precinct member in Oregon’s District 22, which he called a very introductory position. “It’s similar to the (state) house of representatives but on a smaller scale.”

He also ran for the state house in District 22 in 2004, taking 43 per cent of the vote in a losing cause against a 20-year incumbent.

“I had no experience, no money, no campaign team but I worked really hard,” he said.

Oregon is traditionally Liberal but parts of the area where Sonnen is running are more conservative, according to Matt Lindland, a fellow fighter and Republican who was unsuccessful in his own recent run for an Oregon seat.

Sonnen’s first name was chosen by his mother because it’s the last five letters from Michael. It’s pronounced Chale.

“And if you were to ask my mother how to enunciate it, she’d say it’s like cheese and jail.”

Sonnen used his superior wrestling skills to defeat Marquardt, who came into the fight a 5-1 favourite. And once Sonnen got Marquardt down, he kept him there – negating most of Marquardt’s extensive arsenal.

Sonnen, a former NCAA wrestling champion and U.S. Olympic team alternate, went on the attack from the get-go. He took Marquardt down early and hurt him with elbows and punches. It was more of the same in the second when Sonnen, taking a Marquardt elbow from the bottom, suffered the ugly gash on the forehead.

“I was scared that was going to stop the fight,” Sonnen said later.

Sonnen escaped a tight guillotine choke late in the third round.

“It was a miserable experience,” Sonnen said when asked about the choke. “As was that entire fight. I’m so happy it’s over.”

Marquardt finished the fight on top, but it was too little too late.

Sonnen (26-10-1) made US$124,000 including a $32,000 win bonus and $60,000 for fight of the night. Marquardt (32-9-2) earned $105,000, including the fight of the night bonus.

Despite a career that extends back to 2002, Sonnen has operated under the radar for some.

“I’ve never been knocked out, I’ve never been TKO’d, I’ve never lost a judges’ decision,” Sonnen said. “Every fight I’ve ever lost has been by submission. Every fight I’ve ever lost has been in the second round. And every fight I’ve ever lost I was ahead on every judge’s scorecard, with the exception of Demian Maia. He put me away in the first round (at UFC 95). And that’s it.

“I’ve only lost one middleweight fight in my entire life and that was to Maia. Every loss I’ve ever had has been from heavyweight to 205 (pounds) to a catchweight. I’ve never been beat at this weight class, again with the exception of Maia.

“I’ve beat four world champions and I beat a King of Pancrase (a Japanese organization) tonight. So when you ask me was I being overlooked, I want to really remain humble because this is a time to be humble not to be arrogant. But I think you ask a fair question and I think a fair response from me is to say ‘yeah.”‘

The cerebral Sonnen isn’t afraid to speak his mind, whether it is on fellow fighters or politics. And he already has a deft touch.

Asked about the current health care debate in the U.S., he noted it was a federal bill rather than a state issue “so I’m going to be a politician and dance around your question a little bit.” But he added that his party has yet to come up with a better idea.

Sonnen came into the Marquardt fight with an impressive win over Yushin Okami at UFC 104. He also turned heads at UFC 98 when he dropped 36.2 pounds in 21 days before beating Dan Miller after being summoned as a late injury replacement.

Sonnen will face the winner of the UFC 112 bout in April between 185-pound title-holder Anderson Silva and Vitor (The Phenom) Belfort.

Sonnen said he hopes Silva wins because he sees Belfort as a “lot tougher fighter.”

“If I had to choose between the two, I’m going to take the low road and take the easier opponent to get to the championship,” he said bluntly.

In the main event Saturday, Randy (The Natural) Couture defeated Mark (The Hammer) Coleman via second-round submission in a battle of UFC Hall of Famers.

Coleman (16-10) was never really in a light-heavyweight bout dominated by Couture (18-10), who lived up to his entrance music – Ted Nugent’s “Stranglehold.”

“He’s one of the best light-heavyweights in the world, period,” White said of Couture. “He proved it again tonight.”

White, meanwhile, said it was probably Coleman’s last fight in the UFC.

“I just think he’ll have a hard time competing with the guys at the top of the level. Age is a factor with him.”

Coleman, 45, was the UFC’s first heavyweight champion. Couture, 46, is a five-time title-holder who has ruled both the heavyweight and light-heavyweight divisions.

Edmonton heavyweight Tim (The Thrashing Machine) Hague came on strong in the third round but lost a majority decision to Chris (The Crowbar) Tuchscherer.





American Pie

10 02 2010

FS sent this to me and it cheered me up, I hope it does the same for all of you.

Gio-





Moron Of The Day

10 02 2010

Everybody knows at least one functioning brain-dead loser that always has dumb ideas. This is about one of those people. I’m guessing, he’s a liberal.

Gio-

Ohio man accused of tattooing tot’s rear end

LOUISVILLE, Ohio – Police say an Ohio man tattooed the letter “A” on the rear end of a 1-year-old girl visiting his home.

Lee Deitrick, 20, of Louisville was arraigned Wednesday on a felony child endangering charge in Canton Municipal Court.

Authorities say there was no evidence the toddler’s mother permitted the November tattooing. It was not clear what the letter “A” signified.

Deitrick’s grandmother called the tattoo “a wee-little hairline” and said there was hardly anything left of it. Louisville Police Chief Andrew Turowski said the tattoo is smaller than a dime.

A message seeking comment was left at the office of Deitrick’s attorney after the arraignment.

Bond was set at $250,000. If convicted, Deitrick could face up to five years in prison.





Why I Hate Radical Progressives

10 02 2010

Thanks to DW, I was turned on to this little bit of chicanery. It seems as if the Modern Day Mob has gone completely political. It’s now us against a bunch of Radical Progressive thugs!

Gio-

Anti-Tea Party Web Site Part of Scheme to Funnel Funds

By Joseph Abrams

 - FOXNews.com

A new Web site targeting the tea parties is a part of a complex network of money flowing from the mountainous coffers of the country’s biggest labor unions and trickling slowly into political slush funds for Democratic activists.

A seemingly grassroots organization that’s mounted an online campaign to counter the tea party movement is actually the front end of an elaborate scheme that funnels funds — including sizable labor union contributions — through the offices of a prominent Democratic party lawyer.

A Web site popped up in January dedicated to preventing the tea party’s “radical” and “dangerous” ideas from “gaining legislative traction,” targeting GOP candidates in Illinois for the firing squad.

“This movement is a fad,” proclaims TheTeaPartyIsOver.org, which was established by the American Public Policy Center (APPC), a D.C.-based campaign shop that few people have ever heard of.

But a close look reveals the APPC’s place in a complex network of money flowing from the mountainous coffers of the country’s biggest labor unions into political slush funds for Democratic activists.

Here’s how it works: What appears like a local groundswell is in fact the creation of two men — Craig Varoga and George Rakis, Democratic Party strategists who have set up a number of so-called 527 groups, the non-profit election organizations that hammer on contentious issues (think Swift Boats, for example).

Varoga and Rakis keep a central mailing address in Washington, pulling in soft money contributions from unions and other well-padded sources to engage in what amounts to a legal laundering system. The money — tens of millions of dollars — gets circulated around to different states by the 527s, which pay for TV ads, Internet campaigns and lobbyist salaries, all while keeping the hands of the unions clean — for the most part. 

The system helps hide the true sources of funding, giving the appearance of locally bred opposition in states from Oklahoma to New Jersey, or in the case of the Tea Party Web site, in Illinois. 

And this whitewash is entirely legal, say election law experts, who told FoxNews.com that this arrangement more or less the norm in Washington. 

“It’s not illegal but it is, I think, dishonest on the part of the organizations,” said Paul Ryan, a legal counsel at the Campaign Legal Center. “And there’s a reason they do it: they know voters don’t like outsiders coming in to sway the vote.” 

Calls and e-mails to the Maryland-based consultant firm Independent Strategies, run by Varoga and Rakis, were not returned. 

Outside of that firm, the center of their activity appears to be a single office in Southeast D.C. — 300 M Street, Suite 1102 — which plays host to a sprawling political shell game they have established. 

Public records show at least seven political shops listed in Suite 1102, most of which are essentially clones of one another, but all of which have offered money — from measly thousands to game-changing millions — in state-level elections across the country: 

-The American Public Policy Committee     Donations | IRS forms
-Patriot Majority                                                 Donations | IRS forms
-Citizens for Progress                                     Donations | IRS forms
-Oklahoma Freedom Fund                             Donations | IRS forms
-Mid Atlantic Leadership Fund                       Donations | IRS forms
-Public Security Now                                        Donations | IRS forms
-Pioneer Majority                                               Donations | IRS forms
-Bluegrass Freedom Fund                             Donations | IRS forms 

The APPC, which developed the anti-tea party ads, has gotten all of its money for 2010 from Patriot Majority and from Citizens for Progress, which is also called Patriot Majority West. 

Patriot Majority West sent them $25,000 in January, and Patriot Majority added another $5,000. The groups, both run by Varoga and Rakis, also swap hundreds of thousands of dollars between themselves, money often buttressed by gifts from Patriot Majority Midwest, seen above as the Oklahoma Freedom Fund. 

The confusing naming system is intentional, say election law experts, who generally disapprove of the practice. 

“I do take issue with and have long complained about groups that shield particular special interests with innocuous-sounding names like … ‘Americans for America,’” said Ryan. “That type of naming of an organization, I believe, is specifically intended to obscure the true sources of funding of special interest groups behind political activity.” 

These three Patriot Majority groups also send checks to Independent Strategies, the strategy firm run by Varoga and Rakis. And some of the 527s have sent money to VR Strategies, another firm run in part by and named after Varoga. 

The most recent backers of the Patriot Majority and Patriot Majority West, which helped fund the APPC and thus the Tea Party site, form a veritable Who’s Who of the country’s top labor unions: the Service Employees International Union, Change to Win, the Communications Workers of America, the National Education Association, the Teamsters Union, the United Food & Commercial Workers Union and others besides. 

But by far the largest donations have come from a collection of unionized government workers, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) — which in 2008 alone donated $5.8 million to Patriot Majority and another $4.1 million to Patriot Majority Midwest. 

Using this arrangement, Varoga and Rakis are managing what NPR called a “never-ending pot of union money” that they dispense among the 527s they run, which in turn pay for ads in hotly contested election districts. 

That means that taxpayer dollars, sent up as union dues, have been going to fund a host of Democratic causes and help quash the tea party movement. 

What’s more, Varoga and Rakis are not actually present in Suite 1102. That is the office of their lawyer, Joseph Sandler, a longtime general counsel to the Democratic National Committee. 

Sandler, whose firm and trust account raked in over $500,000 in Democratic party money in 2009 alone, told Fox News that there was nothing irregular in their setup. 

“That’s common practice,” said Sandler, a renowned expert on election law who served as general counsel to the Democratic National Committee until February 2009, and whose firm, Sandler Reiff & Young, continues to work for both the Democratic party and numerous left-wing 527 groups. 

Sandler noted that political committees and groups are often run by multiple people and don’t have a central office, but need a place where they can be in ongoing contact with the IRS and other federal agencies that track election funds. 

“It’s very common for a law firm to give their address … as the official address for the organization where correspondence can be received,” he said.

It has the effect of confusing the ultimate sources of election funding, but also serves an important practical end, say election law experts.

“As a practical matter there’s not a huge universe of lawyers in the United States that know political law all that well and most of them are here in D.C., said Ryan, of the Campaign Legal Center. “It’s not uncommon for political organizations to be using lawyers in D.C. or starters, even if they’re all over the country.” 

It is not clear whether TheTeaPartyIsOver.org is the start of a larger campaign run by Varoga and Rakis to target tea party activists. Additional attempts to reach Varoga at a California number were unsuccessful. A staffer answering the phone in Varoga’s Oakland office last week told FoxNews.com that he was unavailable for comment and hung up. 

 





Sarah’s Bracelet

10 02 2010

These turds on the left are getting a bit outrageous with their faux hatred of everything Palin. As soon as I saw the still-picture made from her video at the convention, with a bracelet for honoring her sons service to his country, I knew somebody was going to find a way to make it an issue. I was right! If I knew of a bookie that would take my bet on this, I would bet some really good money that the color of her bracelet is not showing properly due to the angle, the lighting, and a load of other reasons why it appears to be black. Read below, you’ll see what I mean.

Gio-

Palin’s Bigger Blunder

While everyone was focused on notes Sarah Palin apparently wrote on her hand over the weekend, Iraq and Afghanistan veteran Eric Robertson says he noticed the black bracelet on her wrist.

“The name on her black memorial bracelet — one, like the gold star, a demonstration of a friend or associate who was killed in action — is that of her oldest son, Track. Track served honorably in Iraq, and both he and his parents should be thanked for his selfless service to his country. He is also alive.

“Commemorating Track’s service by wearing a black memorial bracelet which is reserved for those dead or even a red bracelet for those missing in action, demonstrates a horrifying contempt for those who gave their last full measure of devotion or an almost unbelievable ignorance of the importance of symbols in American history…”

“Sarah Palin, please take off the bracelet. Be thankful you have no reason to wear it.”

Read more: http://politicalwire.com/archives/2010/02/10/palins_bigger_blunder.html#ixzz0fAFciEut





In Honor Of BK

10 02 2010

One of our talented members here at Giovanni’sWorld, known as BK or bkeyser, has recently been the unfortunate recipient of record breaking snowfall in Maryland. So in honor of all his hard work just to keep his drive open, here’s a little something to give others an idea as to what he’s going through…





Is America Asleep?

10 02 2010

Read this piece from the American Spectator. Then if you agree with the logic and conclusions in it, pray that in the very near future Barack Obama will read and comprehend this article. It may just save the Republic!

Gio-

While America Slept

By from the February 2010 issue

“I do not think America is going to smash,” Winston Churchill told his American stockbroker in the depths of the Great Depression. “On the contrary I believe that they will quite soon begin to recover…. They carved it out of the prairie and the forests. They are going to have a strong national resurgence in the near future.”

Churchill’s own belief in the massive regenerative power of the United States was a constant in his life. He believed that given the will, Americans could achieve anything, because America was special. Yet today it is precisely this trust in the exceptionalism of America that is currently being called into question. History shows that nations that retain self-belief are indeed capable of astonishing feats, but those that suspect their time in the sun has passed cannot be saved, however rich they are or successful they have been.

Joyce Carol Oates, the award-winning novelist and Princeton professor, has written in the Atlantic: “How heartily sick the world has grown, in the first… years of the 21st century, of the American idea! Speak with any non-American, travel to any foreign country, and the consensus is: The American idea has become a cruel joke, a blustery and bellicose bodybuilder luridly bulked up on steroids, consequently low on natural testosterone, deranged and myopic, dangerous.” Such searing hatred of the American Idea from within American society—indeed from inside its cultural elite—is far more dangerous than what non-Americans feel. Of course, it couldn’t matter less what one writer feels if she does not represent the zeitgeist, but much more worrying was President Barack Obama’s reply in April to a question from a Financial Times reporter about whether he believed in American exceptionalism. He said: “I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism.”

This is reminiscent of what the Dodo says in Alice in Wonderland: “Everyone has won and all must have prizes.” Yet that is simply not how international relations work. Greeks might indeed believe in their own exceptionalism, as might Belgians, Thais, or Finns for that matter, but they are not truly exceptional in the light of global current affairs. The West once again looks to America for leadership in a risky world, as we so often have in the past. Although the U.S. economy was in recession in the second quarter of 2009, she pulled out of it in the third quarter. My country, Britain, is still heavily mired in recession, but nothing so cheers our markets as much as knowing that you are finally out of it. American optimism, free market beliefs, and the can-do spirit will raise the Western world out of these doldrums—at least, they will if they are permitted to by your Congress and administration.

Historians will long debate how this recession started and who was responsible—the repeal of Glass-Steagall, Alan Greenspan’s interest rate policies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s lending strategy, Hank Paulson’s stewardship of the Treasury, all will be investigated by what Churchill once called “the pitiless inquest of History”—but however we got into it, only a resurgent America can get us out the other side. Yet with net private investment at 0.1 percent of U.S. GDP in the second quarter of 2009, and the U.S. deficit in 2009 standing at $1.4 trillion, the question the world is asking is: does America retain the belief in her exceptionalism, as in earlier times? All true friends of America must pray that the answer is yes, but if President Obama’s statement is anything to go by, it might be no.

SO IN A RISKY WORLD, where the hegemony of the English-speaking peoples—necessarily led by America—is increasingly being encroached upon by China, India, the European Union, and other powers, will America continue to provide the global leadership she always has, ever since she erupted onto the global stage a century ago? For it was in 1909 that Teddy Roosevelt visited Hampton Roads in Virginia to witness the return, after a 14-month, 45,000-mile circumnavigation of the world, of the Great White Fleet.

On board the presidential yacht Mayflower, Roosevelt watched seven miles of bright white ships— they were painted battle-gray soon after—as they fired a 21-gun salute in his honor. “We have definitely taken our place among the world great powers,” he said afterward, and he was right. The places that the Fleet had visited subtly underlined this important new fact of global geopolitics. From Chesapeake Bay, the 16 battleships had steamed to the Caribbean, past the new possessions of Cuba and Puerto Rico, then down the east coast and up the west coast of South America, protected by the Monroe Doctrine. Each country of the Latin American part of the world cruise at which the Fleet stopped—including Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Mexico—could have harbored any illusions about what this massive new force portended.

After Mexico, the Fleet visited Hawaii (annexed by the U.S. in July 1898), New Zealand, and Australia, China, the (American-owned) Philippines, and then Japan. It then sailed across the Indian Ocean, through the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean, and then across the Atlantic. As a historian of America’s explosion onto the world scene recorded: “The cruise not only impressed the world with America’s newfound military strength, but excited the imagination of Americans as well. A million people had turned out in San Francisco to welcome the ships before their voyage across the Pacific.” There was no talk then of Greek exceptionalism being something that could be equated with American.

So where are we a century—indeed “the American century”—later? All too often in history, it has been the challenge of a small, seemingly insignificant power that has shown up the cracks in a great nation, which has in turn led to the loss of hegemony and the loss of greatness.

Serbia was tiny compared to the Austro- Hungarian Empire in 1914, yet its challenge eventually brought the Habsburgs to their knees. The French Empire dissolved after its defeat by Indochina at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. Two years later, the once-mighty British Empire came to grief at Suez at the hands of puny Egypt. Afghanistan saw the beginning of the end of the Soviet Empire only 10 years after the Christmas 1979 invasion. America must not allow that same country—Afghanistan—to sound the death knell of American greatness, of American exceptionalism. She did not allow the disaster in Vietnam—where she lost 55,000 dead, well over 10 times more than in Iraq and Afghanistan put together—to deflect her.

For do not think that America’s great wealth will save her, if she loses the willpower to be exceptional. The possession of high per capita incomes does not save empires that no longer believe in themselves. History is littered with examples. The Romans were richer than the Huns, the Ottomans than the Mongols, the Aztecs than the Conquistadores, the Romanovs than the Bolsheviks, the British than the Indian National Congress, and so it goes on. It did none of these empires any good once they had lost their self-belief.

YET ALTHOUGH THE CHALLENGES FACED by the English-speaking peoples today are undeniably challenging, they are hardly unique. History might not repeat itself, but it does occasionally rhyme. The War on Terror would be instantly recognizable to the great leaders of the Englishspeaking peoples of the past. Teddy Roosevelt and Winston Churchill would have heard in the overarching ambitions of the jihadists for a caliphate stretching from Spain to Indonesia an echo of the Wilhelmine ambitions that led to the first great assault on the English-speaking peoples in 1914. Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt would also have seen in the viciousness and ruthlessness of the Taliban a shadow of the swastika that fell across Europe from 1933 to 1945. Harry Truman, JFK, Ronald Reagan, and Margaret Thatcher would have no difficulty in spotting the similarities between al Qaeda’s creed of universality with the Marxist dialectical claim of the Soviet Communists to eventual world domination.

What we are witnessing today is nothing less than the fourth great assault on the primacy of the English-speaking peoples from aggressive totalitarian belief systems. The methods might be different each time, but the mindset hasn’t changed. Yet what I fear might have changed is a growing unwillingness of the elites of the English-speaking peoples to continue paying the price for their liberty. The sunset clause President Obama put on his latest surge at his West Point speech is the latest example of this unwillingness.

If the United States does not provide the kind of leadership in our risky world that was provided by Churchill, the two Roosevelts, Truman, JFK, Reagan, and Thatcher, and which one day—especially in the field of homeland security—will be accorded to President Bush and Tony Blair, then we must tremble for the future. For America to listen to the siren voices of isolationism and to withdraw into herself— perhaps citing Washington’s Farewell Address as she does so—would be utterly disastrous for our planet in the 21st century. Power abhors a vacuum, and America’s withdrawal would soon be followed by the emergence of another nation that would not exhibit a fraction of America’s decency, fairness, and veneration for the popular will.

Nor her self-sacrifice: the tale is told of Lyndon Johnson in 1966 asking Charles de Gaulle, when France left NATO in 1966 and demanded the removal of all American bases from French soil: “Does your order include the bodies of American soldiers in France’s cemeteries?” (There are 30,922 Americans from the First World War buried in France and 93,245 from the Second.) On D-Day itself, American lost 2,500 killed, Britain 1,641, Canada 359, and there were Australians and New Zealanders too. Indeed, the English-speaking peoples took 98.4 percent of the military casualties liberating France that day, despite the fact that in June 1944 the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia faced no conceivable threat of invasion from Germany.

WHEN IT COMES TO THE great power that might take America’s place as the 21st century’s hegemon, consider the field. There is the European Union, with its 500 million population, its profound anti-American prejudice, its endemic corruption—its auditors haven’t signed off its accounts in more than a decade—and the fundamentally undemocratic nature of the European project. Would Americans want the French and Germans to replace them and be bathed in the warm limelight of History’s favor? Or there’s China, a vicious totalitarian regime that treats its own massive population with cruelty and contempt, and would undoubtedly treat any other subject people worse, as the Tibetans’ experience proves. Perhaps the least bad would be India, which at least has similar political and legal systems, the rule of law and democracy, and 18 percent of whose people speak English, all thanks to the careful two-century stewardship of the British Empire. Yet can one really see India acting altruistically in areas of the world where her immediate self-interest is not evident, because her Founding Fathers imbued her nation with a noble and all-encompassing mission, as America’s did?

When American hegemony disappears—and, in the words of the hymnal, all of “Earth’s proud empires pass away”—the world will be a poorer and much more dangerous place. Nor is it the case that the election of President Obama will defuse the anti- Americanism to which Joyce Carol Oates so gloatingly referred. Despite his outrageously premature Nobel Peace Prize and his global friendship tours, the eternal verities of global Realpolitik cannot be gainsaid. Wealth, success, and greatness lead to envy and thus hatred; it is an inevitable part of the human condition. The reason the Belgians, Thais, Finns, and those oh-so-exceptional Greeks are not hated today is simply that they are not powerful enough to warrant it. But consider the experience of the Roman Empire, the British Empire, indeed every top-dog power in history. “I never spend five minutes in inquiring if we are unpopular,” the Viceroy of India, Lord Curzon, wrote to the First Lord of the Admiralty, Lord Selborne, in 1900. “The answer is written in red ink on the map of the globe. No, I would count everywhere on the individual hostility of all the great Powers, but would endeavour to arrange things that they were not united against me. I would be as strong in small things as well as big.”

The way that the United States can ensure that the world is never united against her is to abide by the spirit of the Special Relationship. I’ve lost count of the number of times that I’ve read the obituaries of people who have written obituaries of the Special Relationship, yet it is thankfully still with us, as is America’s special relationship with the rest of the English-speaking peoples. If one looks at the forces presently deployed in Afghanistan—i.e., in the vanguard of the struggle between civilization and barbarism in our world today—you see 98,000 American troops and 35,000 from the rest of NATO, of which the British make up the second largest element, with 10,000, then the Germans (in the safest province), but after that the Canadians, who have taken the larger per capita proportion of casualties, and there have been special forces contingents from faraway Australia and New Zealand, even though they are not in NATO. (This is one place where Greek exceptionalism does come into play, in that there are exceptionally few Greeks in Afghanistan.)

As Churchill put it: “It is the English-speaking peoples who, almost alone, keep alight the torch of Freedom. These things are a powerful incentive to collaboration. With nations, as with individuals, if you care deeply for the same things, and these things are threatened, it is natural to work together to preserve them.” Today, we in Britain fear that President Obama has little or no time for the Special Relationship. One of his acts on entering the Oval Office was to return the bust of Churchill given by the British embassy in the wake of 9/11 back to the embassy. More seriously, he canceled the European missile shield. Teddy Roosevelt and Lord Salisbury, Churchill and FDR, Macmillan and JFK, Reagan and Thatcher, and Bush and Blair have defined the Special Relationship, but nothing like that closeness exists between Obama and Gordon Brown. We must hope that Obama and David Cameron get on once the Conservatives win the 2010 election in Britain, for in this risky world we both need the Special Relationship.

“AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM is not just something that Americans claim for themselves,” Charles Murray of the American Enterprise Institute has pointed out. “Historically, Americans have been different as a people, even peculiar, and everyone around the world has recognized it. I’m thinking of qualities such as American optimism even when there doesn’t seem to be any good reason for it. That’s quite uncommon among the peoples of the world. There is the striking lack of class envy in America—by and large, Americans celebrate others’ success instead of resenting it. That’s just about unique, certainly compared to European countries, and something that drives European intellectuals crazy. And then there is perhaps the most important symptom of all, the signature of American exceptionalism—the assumption by most Americans that they are in control of their own destinies.”

It is that assumption, that sense of mastery of their own fates, that I fear might be faltering in modern America, and if so it will be the forerunner of a world historical tragedy, not just for America and the rest of the English-speaking peoples, but ultimately for the whole world. With the risks facing us today, American leadership is needed as much as ever before. America should hold on to her exceptionalism, never apologize for the American Idea, and be proud of the fact that you do things differently there.





Wednesdays Open Thread

10 02 2010

Ok gang, you know the drill. If you have something on your mind, this is the place to let it all hang-out. Well, maybe not all of it, something like 95% would work. Nah, on second thought, let’s go with 90%. Let’s put it this way… if you can do 95% without using vulgar language or nudity, go for it!

I'm amazed that lightning did not strike that very spot on that stage.

 

I hope they all burn in hell for having the nerve to put those words in front of and behind the president and the Democrat leadership. (“You lie” is in order)

Gio-





A GOP Diatribe?

9 02 2010

I must have a mental quirk that allows me to read a lot of crap in a very short time. Once again, this particular piece comes from Slate.com. This, to the best of my recollection, has been my very first day reading junk at this disturbing website. I won’t make this mistake again. I thought the story I posted prior to this one was proof enough that Slate is pretty much useless, but this one about Sarah is downright creepy.

If there are any Republicans out there that read this article and agree with what’s in it, should resign their party affiliation immediately!

Gio-

Sarah Palin’s Storm at the Tea PartyWhy haven’t responsible Republicans spoken out against her?

By Fred Kaplan

Are there any Republican grown-ups out there, and, if there are, will they ever start coming to the aid of their party?

That sentence could segue into any number of topics, but the one at hand is Sarah Palin, her Saturday-night speech at the Tea Party “convention,” and her morning-after declaration on Fox News that, yes, a White House run is on her mind.

Do responsible Republicans (if the phrase hasn’t lapsed from disuse) really want this pumped-up incarnation of Larry “Lonesome” Rhodes as their standard bearer?

Again, the question could be split up into many parts, but this is the “War Stories” column, so let’s focus on Palin’s take on war and peace.

Here’s the key applause-getting line from that section of her talk:

Treating [terrorists] like a mere law-enforcement matter places our country at great risk because that’s not how radical Islamist extremists are looking at this. They know we’re at war. And to win that war we need a commander-in-chief, not a professor of law.

Obviously, she means to be attacking President Barack Obama, but the real question on the table here is does she believe what she’s saying? Or, to put it another way: Is she a rank opportunist, or does she live on another planet? And of the two possibilities, which is worse?

President Obama was at one time a professor of constitutional law at the University of Chicago, but to suggest that he regards counterterrorism as a “mere” legal matter, or that he’s gun-shy as commander-in-chief, is preposterous.

Obama, after all, has nearly tripled the number of U.S. troops sent to Afghanistan. He has approved nearly twice as many CIA airstrikes against Taliban targets in Pakistan during his first year of office as President Bush did in his final year (65 vs. 36), killing more than twice as many militants in the process (571 vs. 268).

He has sent military trainers to help the Yemeni government fight al-Qaida insurgents. He has continued to boost the military budget. He has maintained the Bush administration’s secret surveillance programs (despite protests from many Democrats). And Palin seems to have forgotten the time, last April, when Obama authorized SEAL sharpshooters to kill the three armed pirates who’d hijacked the merchant ship Maersk Alabama off the coast of Somalia. (The amnesia seems to have afflicted many Republicans, including some who lauded the president at the time.)

As for the underwear bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who nearly blew up a passenger plane on Christmas Day, yes, Obama took three days to comment on the incident—though, as many have since noted, Bush took six days to say anything about the shoe bomber, Richard Reid (and no Democrat made an issue of his reticence).

Reading Abdulmutallab his Miranda rights may have seemed a stretch (Obama the law professor!), but it turns out Reid was read his rights, too. More to the point, in neither case did the suspect use the occasion to clam up. As Richard Clarke, the former White House counterterrorism chief under Presidents Clinton and Bush, has noted, Abdulmutallab briefly went quiet because the FBI agents read him his rights while he was under sedation, but after he woke up, he resumed talking quite freely.

Palin’s words (which she read with a venom unbecoming to one who, by her own admission, hadn’t thought a whit about foreign affairs until 18 months ago) are not merely false. They’re dangerous.

If there is a terrorist attack on the United States in the next few years, we could deal with it more confidently, and respond more effectively, if the president were able to rally a spirit of national unity. George W. Bush was given a chance to do this after Sept. 11 and, despite some initial fumbling, rose well to the occasion, at least for a few months.

But if the Republican Party’s most popular aspirant declares that the sitting president doesn’t know we’re at war, isn’t even a commander-in-chief (and crowds roar at this charge with approval), then Obama would have a much harder time repairing a wounded nation.

Palin, of course, is not alone in this irresponsible fraudulence. Just last week, Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, the House minority leader, casually said that Obama is taking a “pre-Sept. 11″ approach to fighting terrorism.

Nobody is suggesting that Boehner run for higher office. But the tea-partiers are screaming, “Run, Sarah, run!” At the Nashville party on Saturday, someone in the audience asked her about the prospects for what he called the “two words that scare liberals—President Palin.”

Let’s be clear on why those words should terrify anyone with a thinking brain. Palin is someone who has clearly never seriously thought through any issue of national importance on her own. She’s excellent at reciting a raucous speech, but she can’t improvise a coherent sentence, which usually reflects an inability to form a coherent idea. (At Nashville, she even had to scribble her five-word legislative agenda on her palm, and glanced down at it during the Q&A.) She is deluded enough to believe (or at least to say Sunday morning on Fox News) that her brief, aborted stint as Alaska’s governor gave her more executive experience than President Obama has even now. She believes that the country should elect leaders, including presumably herself, who seek solutions in “divine intervention.”

Is this how Republicans who aspire to true leadership want to shape their party’s ideas and their country’s discourse? If not, they should hop off the circus wagon now.





All Our Fault

9 02 2010

Why does Obama not salute or at least hold his hand over his heart at these events. This was during the memorial service for the people murdered in cold blood by a terrorist at Ft. Hood!

This piece comes directly from Slate.com, so don’t expect a well-thought-out article on our government or our politicians. Just keep telling yourself that it’s all your fault and you will have an easier time of accepting what Mr. Weisberg has written. I was going to post some short rebuttals to the many of the gaping holes he leaves, but soon realized that my rebuttals would end up being much longer than what he wrote. Plus, my readers are a pretty smart bunch so you probably don’t need me to fill in the gaps.

Gio-

Down With the People

Blame the childish, ignorant American public—not politicians—for our political and economic crisis.

By Jacob Weisberg

In trying to explain why our political paralysis seems to have gotten so much worse over the past year, analysts have rounded up a plausible collection of reasons including: President Obama’s tactical missteps, the obstinacy of congressional Republicans, rising partisanship in Washington, the blustering idiocracy of the cable-news stations, and the Senate filibuster, which has devolved into a super-majority threshold for any important legislation. These are all large factors, to be sure, but that list neglects what may be the biggest culprit in our current predicament: the childishness, ignorance, and growing incoherence of the public at large.

Anybody who says you can’t have it both ways clearly hasn’t been spending much time reading opinion polls lately. One year ago, 59 percent of the American public liked the stimulus plan, according to Gallup. A few months later, with the economy still deeply mired in recession, a majority of the same size said Obama was spending too much money on it. There’s nothing wrong with changing your mind, of course, but opinion polls over the last year reflect something altogether more troubling: a country that simultaneously demands and rejects action on unemployment, deficits, health care, climate change, and a whole host of other major problems. Sixty percent of Americans want stricter regulations of financial institutions. But nearly the same proportion says we’re suffering from too much regulation on business. That kind of illogic—or, if you prefer, susceptibility to rhetorical manipulation—is what locks the status quo in place.

At the root of this kind of self-contradiction is our historical, nationally characterological ambivalence about government. We want Washington and the states to fix all of our problems now. At the same time, we want government to shrink, spend less, and reduce our taxes. We dislike government in the abstract: According to CNN, 67 percent of people favor balancing the budget even when the country is in a recession or a war, which is madness. But we love government in the particular: Even larger majorities oppose the kind of spending cuts that would reduce projected deficits, let alone eliminate them. Nearly half the public wants to cancel the Obama stimulus, and a strong majority doesn’t want another round of it. But 80-plus percent of people want to extend unemployment benefits and to spend more money on roads and bridges. There’s another term for that stuff: more stimulus spending.

The usual way to describe such inconsistent demands from voters is to say that the public is an angry, populist, tea-partying mood. But a lot more people are watching American Idol than are watching Glenn Beck, and our collective illogic is mostly negligent rather than militant. The more compelling explanation is that the American public lives in Candyland, where government can tackle the big problems and get out of the way at the same time. In this respect, the whole country is becoming more and more like California, where ignorance is bliss and the state’s bonds have dropped to an A- rating (the same level as Libya’s), thanks to a referendum system that allows the people to be even more irresponsible than their elected representatives. Middle-class Americans really don’t want to hear about sacrifices or trade-offs—except as flattering descriptions about how ready we, as a people, are, or used to be, to accept them. We like the idea of hard choices in theory. When was the last time we made one in reality?

The politicians thriving at the moment are the ones who embody this live-for-the-today mentality, those best able to call for the impossible with a straight face. Take Scott Brown, the newly elected Senator from Massachusetts. Brown wants government to take in less revenue: He has signed a no-new-taxes pledge and called for an across-the-board tax cut on families and businesses. But Brown doesn’t want government to spend any less money: He opposes reductions in Medicare payments and all other spending cuts of any significance. He says we can lower deficits above 10 percent of GDP—the largest deficits since World War II, deficits so large that they threaten our future as the world’s leading military and economic power—simply by cutting government waste. No sensible person who has spent five minutes looking at the budget thinks that’s remotely possible. The charitable interpretation is that Brown embodies naive optimism, an approach to politics that Ronald Reagan left as one of his more dubious legacies to Republican Party. A better explanation is that Brown is consciously pandering to the public’s ignorance and illusions the same way the rest of his Republican colleagues are.

I don’t mean to suggest that honesty is what separates the two parties. Increasingly, the crucial distinction is between the minority of serious politicians in either party who are prepared to speak directly about our choices, on the one hand, and the majority who indulge the public’s delusions, on the other. I would put President Obama and his economic team in the first group, along with California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Republicans are more indulgent of the public’s unrealism in general, but Democrats have spent years fostering their own forms of denial. Where Republicans encourage popular myths about taxes, spending, and climate change, Democrats tend to stoke our fantasies about the sustainability of entitlement spending as well as about the cost of new programs.

Our inability to address long-term challenges makes a strong case that the United States now faces an era of historical decline. Our reluctance to recognize economic choices also portends negative effects for the rest of the world. To change this story line, we need to stop blaming the rascals we elect to office and start looking to ourselves.





Obama’s Failed Presidency

9 02 2010

H/t goes out to Tom in NC for passing this along. The observations made in this article express my thoughts about the failure of our president. 

Gio-

An article from American Thinker by Geoffrey P. Hunt

Anatomy of a Failing Presidency

Barack Obama is on track to have the most spectacularly failed
presidency since Woodrow Wilson.  In the modern era, we’ve seen several
failed presidencies–led by Jimmy Carter and LBJ.  Failed presidents have one
strong common trait– they are repudiated, in the vernacular, spat out. Of
course, LBJ wisely took the exit ramp early, avoiding a shove into oncoming
traffic by his own party.  Richard Nixon indeed resigned in disgrace, yet his
reputation as a statesman has been partially restored by his triumphant
overture to  China  20.

    But, Barack Obama is failing.  Failing big.  Failing fast. And failing
everywhere: foreign policy, domestic initiatives, and most importantly, in
forging connections with the American people. The incomparable Dorothy
Rabinowitz in the Wall Street Journal put her finger on it: He is failing
because he has no understanding of the American people, and may indeed loathe
them. Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard says he is failing because he has
lost control of his message, and is overexposed.  Clarice Feldman of American
Thinker produced a dispositive commentary showing that Obama is failing
because fundamentally he is neither smart nor articulate; his intellectual
dishonesty is conspicuous by its audacity and lack of shame.

    But, there is something more seriously wrong: How could a new president
riding in on a wave of unprecedented promise and goodwill have forfeited his
tenure and become a lame duck in six months?  His poll ratings are in free
fall.  In generic balloting, the Republicans have now seized a five point
advantage.  This truly is unbelievable.  What’s going on?

    No narrative. Obama doesn’t have a narrative.  No, not a narrative about
himself.  He has a self-narrative, much of it fabricated, cleverly disguised
or written by someone else.  But this self-narrative is isolated and doesn’t
connect with us.  He doesn’t have an American narrative that draws upon the
rest of us.  All successful presidents have a narrative about the American
character that intersects with their own where they display a command of
history and reveal an authenticity at the core of their personality that
resonates in a positive endearing way with the majority of Americans. We
admire those presidents whose narratives not only touch our own, but who seem
stronger, wiser, and smarter than we are. Presidents we admire are
aspirational peers, even those whose politics don’t align exactly with our
own: Teddy Roosevelt, FDR, Harry Truman, Ike, and Reagan.

    But not this president. It’s not so much that he’s a phony, knows
nothing about economics, and is historically illiterate and woefully small
minded for the size of the task–all contributory of course.  It’s that he’s
not one of us.  And whatever he is, his profile is fuzzy and devoid of
content, like a cardboard cutout made from delaminated corrugated paper.
Moreover, he doesn’t command our respect and is unable to appeal to our own
common sense. His notions of right and wrong are repugnant and how things
work just don’t add up. They are not existential. His descriptions of the
world we live in don’t make sense and don’t correspond with our experience.

    In the meantime, while we’ve been struggling to take a measurement of
this man, he’s dissed just about every one of us–financiers, energy
producers, banks, insurance executives, police officers, doctors, nurses,
hospital administrators, post office workers, and anybody else who has a
non-green job.  Expect Obama to lament at his last press conference in 2012:
“For those of you I offended, I apologize.  For those of you who were not
offended, you just didn’t give me enough time; if only I’d had a second term,
I could have offended you too.”

    Mercifully, the Founders at the Constitutional Convention in 1787
devised a useful remedy for such a desperate state–staggered terms for both
houses of the legislature and the executive.  An equally abominable Congress
can get voted out next year.  With a new Congress, there’s always hope of
legislative gridlock until we vote for president again two short years after
that.

    Yes, small presidents do fail, Barack Obama among them.  The coyotes
howl but the wagon train keeps rolling along.

    Margaret Thatcher: “The trouble with Socialism is, sooner or later you
run out of other people’s money.”

    “When you subsidize poverty and failure, you get more of both.” – James
Dale Davidson, National Taxpayers  Union

“The more corrupt the state, the more it legislates.” – Tacitus

“A Liberal is a person who will give away everything he doesn’t own.” -
Unknown





Obama’s Admin Just Won’t Quit

9 02 2010

We have evidence that our fragile financial woes are about to take a slide backwards and Obama is proposing a NEW FEDERAL AGENCY. And how many billions of our money is he willing to waste on FAKE SCIENCE? Look folks, if none of this is pissing you off, then I beg you to NOT vote in November. And you may want to consider revoking your citizenship as an American. Just a thought.

Gio-

‘Climate Service,’ New Federal Climate Change Agency, Is Forming

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Monday proposed a new agency to study and report on the changing climate.

Also known as global warming, climate change has drawn widespread concern in recent years as temperatures around the world rise, threatening to harm crops, spread disease, increase sea levels, change storm and drought patterns and cause polar melting.

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Jane Lubchenco, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, announced NOAA will set up the new Climate Service to operate in tandem with NOAA’s National Weather Service and National Ocean Service.

“Whether we like it or not, climate change represents a real threat,” Locke said Monday at a news conference.

Lubchenco added, “Climate change is real, it’s happening now.” She said climate information is vital to the wind power industry, coastal community planning, fishermen and fishery managers, farmers and public health officials.

NOAA recently reported that the decade of 2000-2009 was the warmest on record worldwide; the previous warmest decade was the 1990s. Most atmospheric scientists believe that warming is largely due to human actions, adding gases to the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels such as coal and natural gas.

Researchers and leaders from around the world met last month in Denmark to discuss ways to reduce climate-warming emissions, and a follow-up session is planned for later this year in Mexico.

“More and more people are asking for more and more information about climate and how it’s going to affect them,” Lubchenco explained. So officials decided to combine climate operations into a single unit.

Portions of the Weather Service that have been studying climate, as well as offices from some other NOAA agencies, will be transferred to the new NOAA Climate Service.

The new agency will initially be led by Thomas Karl, director of the current National Climatic Data Center. The Climate Service will be headquartered in Washington and will have six regional directors across the country.

Lubchenco also announced a new NOAA climate portal on the Internet to collect a vast array of climatic data from NOAA and other sources. It will be “one-stop shopping into a world of climate information,” she said.

Creation of the Climate Service requires a series of steps, including congressional committee approval. But if all goes well, it should be finished by the end of the year, officials said.

In recent years, a widespread private weather forecasting industry has grown up around the National Weather Service, and Lubchenco said she anticipates growth of private climate-related business around the new agency.

While most people notice the weather from day to day or week to week, climate looks at both the averages and extremes of weather over longer periods of time. And understanding both weather and climate, and their changes, are vital to much of the world’s economic activity ranging from farming to travel to energy use and production and even food shipments and disease prevention.

Atmospheric scientists have long joked that climate is what you expect and weather is what you get. But greenhouse warming is changing what can be expected from climate, and researchers are seeking to understand and anticipate the impacts of that change.

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On the Net:

NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov





Tuesdays Open Thread

9 02 2010

Wouldn’t you know it. We are expecting more snow tonight and through to Wednesday night. What doesn’t get dumped on us here, is definitely going to hit BK again and just add to their already 2.5 ft of snow on the ground. The storms just keep on coming and so do the dummies that swear this is all caused by Global Warming.

Since this is an Open Thread, you may talk about the non-existence of Anthropogenic Global Warming or anything else that you find interesting. Happy Tuesday and enjoy!

I support the Tea-Party Express!





Tom Reviews Sarah At T-Party Convention

9 02 2010

This just happens to be one of my favorite pictures of Sarah Palin.

Tom in NC has the ability to put into words exactly what a lot of us are thinking, and if you watched any of Sarah’s speech at the Tea-Party Convention, you will probaly agree with Tom once again.

In this day and age, It’s kinda nice having people that you can always rely on.

Gio-

Sarah’s Grandslam Homerun

 
Sounding more Presidential than I can ever remember her sounding, Sarah Palin took to the batter’s box Saturday night at the TEA Part Convention and blasted a homerun that I doubt has even landed yet and might very well have gone into low earth orbit. She hammered this do-nothing, corrupt  administration and took them to task for 12 months out of control spending, pushing a socialist agenda, weakening our national security and wrecking our economy.
 
Now I admit that I thought she would choose not to run in 2012, but after that speech I am willing to admit that I maybe wrong. She did what she does best, got Conservatives fired up and ready to take the fight to the liberals. I was glad that she did not tone it down either, she came out swinging and that’s exactly what this TEA Party movement needs. The only thing that disappointed me is her support for McCain, now I know he chose her to be his running mate in 2008, but it sounds to me that she thinks she owes him something. It was not her fault that they lost, McCain was a weak candidate from the get-go and a RINO through and through and if had not been for Sarah, his loss would have been a hell of a lot worse. She could only prop up his inept campaign so much before it collapsed under it’s own weight.
 
The liberals on the other hand brought out their tired old rhetoric about Sarah, claiming she was stirring up hate, racism and divisiveness, blah,blah, blah. You know, you libs need a new playbook, the one you got is pretty old and stale and we can read you like a cheap novel but with all the dinosaurs in your party that doesn’t surprise me one bit. The personal attacks against Sarah and Conservatives in general will not scare us or divert us from our mission because we know you are worried and running scared. You are losing support from your constituents and your agenda is going down in flames. The only way you will come out on top in November is if you cheat and if that happens then that revolution that Sarah mentioned will become a reality, and it will not be peaceful. I’m here to tell you now that if you try any shenanigans then you will see a true revolution because the majority of Americans will not put up with it. You have been warned.
 
What we saw at the TEA Party Convention is a true grassroots movement that has grown exponentially from humble beginnings and if you liberals chose to ignore, mock and insult us, you do so at your own risk. We are a political force now from coast to coast in every state and we have already drawn first blood in Virginia, New Jersey and Massachusetts and it is only the beginning. November is going to be very costly for the democratic party, if you thought that 1994 was bad, you haven’t seen any thing yet. The political lifeblood of the democratic party is going to run out of capital hill like a river after a flood, and in this case the flood will be CONSERVATISM.
 
The one thing I am looking forward to the most(besides kicking liberals butts in November, I mean) is watching the likes of Keith Olbermann, Ed Schultz, David Shuster, Joy Behar and Andrea Mitchell have a collective meltdown on election night, should be entertaining to see them  babbling like imbeciles trying to spin a Conservative Victory as something positive for the democrats. We are going to thoroughly enjoy the nation wide celebration of the demise of democratic rule in Congress.
  
Tom In NC







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